For teams in the FIRA Sports, FIRA Challenge, and FIRA Air categories as well as teams in the FIRA Youth Humanoid Kid league:

A team can enter multiple sub-leagues as long as: (1) all the sub-leagues belong to the same league, and (b) the team name, affiliation, and team members are exactly the same for the all different sub-leagues.

For teams in the FIRA Youth category:

A team can enter at most three sub-leagues as long as: (1) all the sub-leagues belong to the same league, and (b) the team name, affiliation, and team members are exactly the same for the all different sub-leagues.

You can participate in more leagues and sub-leagues, but in this case, you must pay an extra registration, even if you use the same team name, affiliation, and team members. Furthermore, it is the responsibility of the teams to ensure that their schedule does not collide with other sub-leagues.

Welcome to the Federation of International Robot-Sport Association

Robot soccer can be portrayed as a competition of advanced robot technology within a confined space. It offers a challenging arena to the young generation and researchers working with autonomous mobile robotic systems. It is hoped that FIRA’s flagship event, called the FIRA Robot World Cup (or the FIRA Cup in short), which started in 1996, together with many other FIRA events, will help generate interests in robotics in the young minds.

Through these events, FIRA hopes to help them better understand and appreciate, with interests, the scientific concepts and technological developments involved. FIRA believes that some of these interests will fuel scientific and engineering skills that ultimately develop into research outcomes to serve mankind in a variety of ways.

Ever since its establishment, FIRA has had venues for its annual FIRA Cup in Australia, Brazil, China, France and Korea. Making progress over successive years since 1996, FIRA Cup has now attained world recognition as a robot festival.